Teratogenic

Synonyms for "teratogenic" (13 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Closest matches (3)

Strong matches (4)

Related words (6)

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

5 relation types

Synonyms

1 entries

Related terms

2 entries

derived from

1 entries

has context

1 entries

related to

6 entries

Translations

23 translations across 9 languages.

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Catalan

4 entries
  • teratogen adj (causing malformations)
  • teratogènic adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogènica adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratògena adj (causing malformations)

Chinese Mandarin

1 entries
  • 致畸 adj (causing malformations)

Finnish

2 entries
  • teratogeeninen adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogeeninen adj (causing malformations)

French

4 entries
  • tératogène adj (causing malformations)
  • tératogénique adj (relating to malformations)
  • tératogénétique adj (relating to malformations)
  • tératogène noun (teratogenic agent)

Greek

1 entries
  • τερατογόνος adj (causing malformations)

Italian

4 entries
  • teratogenetico adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogenetico adj (causing malformations)
  • teratogeno adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogeno adj (causing malformations)

Japanese

1 entries
  • 催奇形性 adj (causing malformations)

Portuguese

4 entries
  • teratogénico adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogénico adj (causing malformations)
  • teratogênico adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogênico adj (causing malformations)

Spanish

2 entries
  • teratogénico adj (relating to malformations)
  • teratogénico adj (causing malformations)

Sample sentences

2 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

In particular, the impact of the biomaterial used remains to be defined; grafting (biotissue can be introduced via direct cell implantation (cell therapy), biotissue transplantation, or gene therapy); risk of teratogenic effect and of immune reaction (i.e., in the umbilical cord cells the immune risk being weaker); religious and legal issues with respect to the different country regulations.

Source: wiktionary

[…] as well as chemicals (potentially toxic) used in daily routine in research and educational institutes, industries (e.g., carcinogenic, mutagenic and teratogenic) and in household that may confer danger to the living beings if discharged in the umbworld.

Source: wiktionary

More for "teratogenic"

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.